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Overview'Greed is good' Sound familiar? Apart from being Michael Douglas' iconic line in Wall Street, it's the attitude those in power in Ireland wholeheartedly embraced. In Ireland, property development became the career du jour and banks went crazy handing over money for countless blocks of apartments at home and abroad that many couldn't afford anyway. The government turned a blind eye as costs went up, standards went down, and reaped the benefits. Many factors are blamed for the current crisis but who is really responsible? Why was everyone taken by surprise? How did it happen? How can we prevent similar crises from happening again? Where do we go from here? The time has come for us to understand exactly why the Celtic Tiger crumbled so dramatically so that we can have some say in our own lives and livelihoods rather than leaving the control in the hands of the few. There is a way out of this mess, based on high standards, appropriate levels of pay and conditions, fair and efficient taxation, strict regulation in the public sector and in financial markets. Those in positions of power must share the pain. Routes to recovery are charted here, with radical ideas such as abandoning the euro, allowing banks to fail and embracing nuclear power. This is an ordinary person's take on the whole scene. Cearbhall A Dalaigh has gathered together all the issues in one affordable easily-understood package so that the average person can see why Ireland is broke but more importantly, how we can fix it. It's time to think of the solution and not just the problem. SOME KEY ISSUES FEATURED IN CELTIC MELTDOWN * Lazy promotion of growth by encouragement of property speculation and low-wage immigration. * Big lenders of cash to banks benefit while Irish taxpayers take the hit. * Growth in administrators and 'management' far in excess of growth in numbers of nurses, police, etc. * Profligate government borrowing, which will take years to repay. * Public Private 'Initiatives' that have increased the costs of services being provided and have been so badly managed the taxpayer will carry the economic burden for decades to come. * Pension policies that mean civil servants have essentially unfunded, inflation-proof, final salary-based pensions, while most of the private workforce has nothing that compares to this. * Our money has been spent and our futures put in hock without any compensatory benefits: failing, dirty hospitals, prefabs all over schoolyards, falling education standards and higher rates of illiteracy, more serious crimes and increasing numbers of prisoners, public transport a mess. * Creation of quangos lined with unqualified party hacks also on inflation-proof, final-salary-linked pensions and who have no accountability to the people or the government. * A disproportionate level of Dail representation and ministers when much law-making is now done from Brussels. * Foolhardy promotion of poorly-specified software projects such as e-voting, the costs of which escalate while their benefits recede or disappear. * Billions spent irresponsibly on consultants who added little value and on projects whose budgets were invariably out of control. Visit the Celtic Meltdown website www.celticmeltdown.webs.com Full Product DetailsAuthor: Cearbhall O DalaighPublisher: Gill Imprint: The Collins Press Dimensions: Width: 12.80cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 19.80cm Weight: 0.294kg ISBN: 9781848890121ISBN 10: 1848890125 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 01 July 2009 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: In Print ![]() Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock. Table of ContentsIntroduction 1 Chapter 1: When the Chickens Came Home to Roost 6 Chapter 2: The Insiders - Bertie's Men 29 Chapter 3: The Celtic Tiger - What Was it Exactly? 44 Chapter 4: 2003 and 2004 - The Critical Years 52 Chapter 5: The Banks - They Gambled and Lost 63 Chapter 6: Loan Rangers - The Mortgage Three-Card Trick Explained 87 Chapter 7: Broken Trust - The Facts 109 Chapter 8: Anglo Irish Share Support Scheme - Enterprise of Deception 115 Chapter 9: Sweden's Banking Model - Would it Work in Ireland? 120 Chapter 10: Let Failed Banks Fail - Why Not? 126 Chapter 11: Our Leaders - Without Good Leadership We are Lost 150 Chapter 12: Politician's Salaries - Astonishing 160 Chapter 13: Public Sector Salaries - Incredible 165 Chapter 14: Public Sector Pensions - Gold-Plated 169 Chapter 15: Shocking Waste - A Whiff of Corruption 180 Chapter 16: Deflation - The Killer Blow 185 Chapter 17: The Way Forward - What to Do? 195 Chapter 18: Abandon the Euro - Should We? 203 Chapter 19: Devaluation - Would it Help? 211 Chapter 20: Energy Supply Security 217 Chapter 21: Green Energy Technologies and Opportunities 225 Chapter 22: Nuclear Power - Why Not? 253 Chapter 23: The Budget April 2009 271 Conclusion 281Reviews'Deserves attention for its clarity, factual depth and an ability to pull together differing points of view and proposals into a coherent structure' Irish Mail on Sunday 'O Dalaigh might just have the credentials to show us the way to go, having worked with the states released by the break-up of the USSR' RTE Guide Author InformationCearbhall A Dalaigh from Kerry emigrated to America in 1970 and returned to Ireland in 1978. He invested in and worked in the tourism and fishing industries and sold those interests in 1990. He then worked with the EU-TACIS programme in the early 1990s. [The Technical Assistance to the Commonwealth of Independent States programme was originally set up to give aid to the newly-independent countries of the Soviet Empire.] From the mid-1990s to 2007 he was a subcontractor in the Irish construction industry. His interests lie in economics and Irish politics. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |